Richard Lennon


Richard Gerard Lennon was an American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church. He served as a Bishop of Cleveland, Ohio, from May 15, 2006, until December 28, 2016, when he resigned because of poor health.

Early life and education

A native of Arlington, Massachusetts, Lennon's father Albert was that town's deputy fire chief. Lennon attended St. James the Apostle grammar school in St. James parish in Arlington, where he was an altar boy. In 1965 Lennon graduated from Matignon, a Catholic high school in Cambridge, Massachusetts, where he was a member of the National Honor Society. Lennon attended Boston College where he was a mathematics major for two years before entering St. John's Seminary in Brighton, Massachusetts, where he graduated in 1969 with a bachelor's degree in philosophy. Lennon received a Masters in Sacramental Theology in 1973 and an M.A. in Church History in 1984, both from St. John's.

Ministry

Lennon was ordained in the Boston archdiocese on May 19, 1973. From 1973 to 1982 he served at St. Mary of the Nativity Church in Scituate, Massachusetts, and from 1982 to 1988 at St. Mary's Church in West Quincy, Massachusetts. In 1988 he became the Archdiocese of Boston's assistant for canonical affairs. Shortly after it was established, Lennon criticized Boston auxiliary bishop William Murphy, whose assistant he was, for funding a job placement for priests accused of sexual abuse of minors. In 1999, he became the seminary rector.
In June 2001, Lennon was invested as a knight in both the Sovereign Military Order of Malta and the Equestrian Order of the Holy Sepulchre of Jerusalem.

Archdiocese of Boston

On June 29, 2001, Lennon was named an auxiliary bishop of Boston. He was consecrated on September 14, 2001. In December 2002, Bernard Francis Law resigned as Archbishop of Boston in the middle of an ongoing and extensive sexual abuse scandal, and Lennon served as the apostolic administrator of the archdiocese from Law's resignation until the accession of Law's successor, Sean O'Malley, in July 2003. O'Malley appointed Lennon as the vicar general of the Archdiocese of Boston and he held this position from August 2003 to April 2006. In a documentary on the clergy sexual abuse and church closings in the Boston area that aired in 2007 on PBS's Frontline, Lennon tried to prevent the filming of "exterior shots of the archdiocese's chancery building".
Lennon's appointment as apostolic administrator of the Boston archdiocese, following the resignation of Law, brought criticism from some sex-abuse victims' groups.

Diocese of Cleveland

On April 5, 2006, Pope Benedict XVI named Lennon the tenth Bishop of Cleveland, Ohio, to replace Anthony Pilla who was suffering from heart disease. He was installed on May 15, 2006.
In June 2008, after allowing the diocesan reconfiguration process inherited from his predecessor to inform his decision, Lennon announced plans to close at least 30 parishes in the cities of Cleveland and Lorain, including older parishes in Cleveland's inner ring suburbs. Parishioners and members of Cleveland's City Council attacked his plan, including Michael Polensek of Ward 11. Critics have pointed out that several of the churches to be closed enjoyed steady, if limited, monthly incomes, and that several of these churches have a politically liberal orientation. However, a portion of these churches were also in need of major capital investment after years of delayed maintenance, which was not always readily evident when examined from the outside.
Significant criticism of the parish cluster organization and the decision-making process associated with the closing of parishes followed. Some Catholics in the diocese requested Vatican oversight of Lennon in 2009, seeking review by the Congregation for Bishops. Lennon presided at 78 Masses that marked the closing, merging, and opening of parishes over the next 14 months.
With the closing of St. Peter Church, a 151-year-old parish, many parishioners and their pastor broke from the bishop and founded the Community of St. Peter. On March 4, 2013, Robert Marrone, who is listed as the leader of that community, was excommunicated latae setentiae. The reason given was for schism, for having been disobedient to his ecclesiastical superiors in agreeing to oversee the breakaway community. The diocese stated it would meet with the church's members and its board in an effort to resolve the situation, but at the same time warned that they were also subject to excommunication if they did not soon rejoin the official church.
In July 2011, the Vatican conducted a rare investigative apostolic visit of the Cleveland diocese and the Bishop Emeritus of Trenton, New Jersey, John Mortimer Smith, conducted the investigation.
In March 2012, the Vatican ordered the reversal of the closings of the 13 of 50 churches that had pursued an appeal to the Congregation for the Clergy.

Resignation

On February 4, 2016, Lennon underwent an emergency heart procedure. In November, he submitted a request for early retirement. Pope Francis accepted his resignation as bishop on December 28. That same day Lennon revealed he had been diagnosed with vascular dementia.

Death

Lennon died in Cleveland, Ohio, on October 29, 2019. After a funeral mass at the Cathedral of St. John the Evangelist, he was entombed in the cathedral's mortuary chapel.